Friday, 30 March 2012

Palm Sunday

A sermon for Palm Sunday. The readings are: Isaiah 50:4-9 and John 12:12-16.

This might not be a sermon I'd preach at this time next year. But it's the word I have to bring on Sunday.

Today I want to share with you about the disgrace of
the triumphal entry.

Because the triumphal entry, as we ‘headline’ the
narrative as. Is a narrative in which assumptions are turned upside down. And
it is a narrative in which everything that one might expect to happen, doesn’t
happen, or at least, doesn’t happen in the way expected.

It may happen in the way prophesied long before.

But it doesn’t happen in a way that everyone can really
understand.

Because the triumphal entry is the moment.

It is the moment when all the different strands of
Jesus’ life get woven together in a way that some rejoice in and some are
confused by some. Some are hopeful about. And some are bemused about.

The triumphal entry isn’t necessarily a triumph in the
way the people of Jesus’ day, or indeed, the way that we, think about a
triumphal entry.

So today I want to make three points.

The first is that the triumphal entry is the moment
when the different strands of Jesus’ life are woven together in the public eye.

The second is that the triumphal entry is only a
triumphal entry because it is a disgrace leading to a disgrace.

The third is that triumphal entry provides a model for
us, as to how we could live our lives.

So the first.

Up until this point in his life Jesus has lived a life
of love for others. He has willingly given up any hope of creature comforts and
security, to live a life as a poured out offering to God.

Jesus has given of himself in his love.

In his energies, spent with the poor.

And his time spent with the broken.

The unclean.

The diseased.

The forsaken.

The forgotten.

The despised.

The outsiders.

The ritually impure.

The unwanted.

The unloved.

The despairing.

The dirty.

The depraved.

The villains.

The disassociated with the culture and the empire.

The powerless.

The power holders.

This is the life that Jesus has led.

And these are the people that Jesus has loved.

There is no doubt that Jesus’ actions were often with
the forgotten.

The Liberation Theology movement of the 1960’s and
1970’s in South America would have us believe that Jesus had a “preferential
option for the poor”.

That Jesus’ preference was to serve the poor. That his
love was preferentially focused on the poor.

I can see how liberation theology gets to that point.

But I think they might miss the point.

Jesus’ preferential option, is for everyone.

There is no one outside of the remit of his love.

The centurion. Or the bleeding woman.

The tax collector or the rich young man.

It would be easy to say that Jesus had a preferential
option for the poor, but I think that is a misread.

Jesus spent so much time with the poor and broken, not
only because he loved them and had hopes for them, and cared for them, and
wanted the best for them and wanted to love them, and for them to find shalom,
but Jesus also spent time for the poor as a model of how the rich, the
Pharisees, the ruling elite, should live, side by side with the poor.

In relationships of mutual love and respect with the
poor.

Jesus’ preferential option was for everyone, and he
knew that for people to really live, to embrace life in all its abundance,
their and our, standards and expectations would have to be turned upside down.

That the dreams they had would have to be turned upside
down.

And this is exactly what is enacted in the triumphal
entry.

The threads of Jesus’ life of loving the poor. Of
living to different standards. Of living by different expectations. All of
these things. All of these aspects of his life are in some way evoked by the
triumphal entry.

Certainly, there are prophecies that predicted that the
Messiah would enter Jerusalem on a donkey, on a colt.

The prophet Zechariah had prophesied how Israel’s true
king would approach the city, ‘Rejoice greatly, O Daughter of Zion! Shout,
Daughter of Jerusalem! See, your king comes to you, righteous and having
salvation, gentle and riding on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey.’
(Zechariah 9:9)

This prophecy hung in the air, like radio static, a
background noise in people’s minds, ringing bells for them.

But there is also an expectation associated with past
experience. That expects something vastly different. That holds onto the
prophecy, but expects to see it played out very differently.

As he approached Jerusalem the people began shouting,
“blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord”.

Most of the crowd were excited, it was Passover time
after all and the people were ready to praise God for the arrival of the last
true king. They shared the sense of occasion, the excitement and anticipation.
Many in the crowd knew Jesus, he’d been to Jerusalem before and he was
returning, riding a donkey.

Jesus the king was coming.

Culpepper suggests that, ‘Jesus was a king, but no
ordinary one – the king of fishermen, tax collectors, Samaritans, harlots,
blind men, demoniacs and cripples. Those who followed Jesus were a ragtag
bunch, pathetically unfit for the grand hopes that danced in their
imaginations.’

Over the years Jerusalem had seen plenty of kings and
generals arriving in triumph.

And the arrival of kings and generals pretty much
always followed a standard pattern.

Whether celebrating the return of a victorious general
after a battle or welcoming a new conqueror, taking over the city, four things
would happen.

1. The conqueror or ruler would be escorted into the
city by its citizens or the conquerors army.

2. The procession would be accompanied by hymns or
announcements of greatness.

3. There would be elements of the procession that
depict the authority of the ruler.

4. The entrance would be followed by a ritual act such
as sacrifice which takes place in the temple, so the ruler symbolically takes
ownership of the whole city.

But Jesus does not enter Jerusalem as a conqueror, a
warlord, or a returning general, on a grand war horse, covered in armour,
followed by a huge army.

Jesus approached Jerusalem on a donkey. Not as a
conqueror, but as a servant.

The truth is, Jesus’ triumphal entry had more in common
with travelling through the slums with the poor than it did with parading
towards an enemy with a vast and experienced army, expectant of military
victory.

Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem had excited noise
and clamour, but in Luke’s account of the narrative, in the midst of it Jesus
wept, heavy with the burden of pain yet to befall Jerusalem. Unlike a world
champion boxer entering a ring expectant of an easy victory, Jesus’ heart is
heavy. Heavy but determined.

Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem was one in which
the true and righteous King entered the city with an attitude of servanthood,
rather than as commander in chief surrounded by state of the art military
equipment ready to take the place by force.

Jesus’ triumphal entry tied up all the threads of his
life, into one visual, prophetic act that would stand as a metaphor and symbol
of his values and purpose.

The second point I want to make is that the triumphal
entry is only a triumphal entry because it is a disgrace leading to a disgrace.

We find in our Isaiah reading, words of prophecy. And
prophecy is a complicated beast. Prophecy in the Old Testament doesn’t
necessarily relate to just one event or occurrence. So in our reading today we
have one of the three pictures of the Suffering Servant given in the book of
Isaiah. And the suffering servant in this passage, refers to Isaiah himself, a
man carrying the burdens of speaking unwelcome words to a community who don’t
want to hear what he has to say.

But this prophetic image of the suffering servant also
relates to Christ and his sufferings on behalf of so many.

And so we read in Isaiah 50:6, of Isaiah and Christ,
offering their backs to those who beat them, that they won’t hide their faces
away. Instead they will be open to the Sovereign Lord’s call to be vulnerable.

And Isaiah 50:7 states, “Because the Sovereign LORD
helps me, I will not be disgraced.”

Christ will not be disgraced.

Christ will not be disgraced even though he will set
his face towards Jerusalem and willingly walk towards his death. Ultimately
Christ will not be disgraced, as he will die, be resurrected and then will come
the time for the ascension. In the end Christ will not be disgraced.

As Jesus enters Jerusalem, it’s clear that his way is
not the anticipated way. Many of the different factions of the crowd would have
been expecting different things from this king, many would have been expecting
him to negotiate with the Roman rulers, entering in victory, many would have
been expecting him to enter Jerusalem with a great army, ready to take back the
temple for God. Many of them would have been expecting Jesus to take on a key
role within the temple, to reform the temple practices.

Instead, Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem, is to them a
disgrace: instead of military victory, or religious victory or political
victory, Jesus brings with him a donkey he rides as a fulfilment of a prophecy,
and Jesus arrives with a rag tag group of the poor, the unclean, the socially
excluded.

Rather than arriving in a fashion everyone expects,
Jesus turns the expectations of standards upside down.

Rather than arriving to preach in a cassock alb, or
cassock and surplus, as expected, Jesus stands in an old T-shirt, marked and
dirty. Turning the standards of the world upside down. (By the way, just to be
clear, I’m not suggesting I’m Jesus!)

But for Jesus, even in this social disgrace of his
arrival in Jerusalem, Jesus is still cheered, there is still a hope with the
crowd, for Jesus.

But notice, only a short time after, that before Pilate
the crowd have turned and deserted him, calling instead for his crucifixion.
And then, at the cross, the crowd have deserted Jesus in his final disgrace,
the ultimate disgrace, crucified like a petty criminal amongst other petty
criminals.

In a worldly sense, it’s hard to see anything but
disgrace here.

As Claiborne and Wilson-Hartgrove suggest, the way of
Christ was not the way of a conquering king, instead, “Here was a king who
ruled with a towel rather than an iron fist, a king who rode a donkey instead
of a warhorse, a king who carried a cross rather than a sword.”

Instead of a
military triumphal entry with pomp and ceremony. We encounter a Christ whose
triumphal entry is that of a servant. A triumphal entry shadowed in disgrace.

The third point I want to make is that the triumphal
entry provides a model for us, as to how we could live our lives.

Quite simply, Jesus enters Jerusalem with his face,
“set like flint” as Isaiah puts it. There is a task to be done. There are
people to serve. There is a new kingdom to pronounce. There is hope to enact.
there is resurrection to await. there is the knowledge that in the eyes and
mouths of many Jesus will encounter in Jerusalem, they will be disappointed with
him, their perceptions shattered.

But for so many others, there are hopes fulfilled and
dreams set ablaze. Jesus enters Jerusalem resolutely. And he enters Jerusalem
to serve. And he enters Jerusalem with hope.

And these characteristics of resolute, hopeful
servanthood can be for us a word to challenge, encourage, and refresh us, even
in the discomfort that we might come to encounter.

Lighting Beacons: a liturgy for life

Fear and Dust: A Hymnal For The Wild (Volume 1)

Old Lost and Broken Dreams

Crucify This Jesus

The Beat Eucharist

Who Am I?

Contact

To make contact, find me on Twitter @BeatLiturgist

Or email (without spaces) timothyjameswatson @ hotmail . com

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